P
Peter Simmonds
Researcher at University of Oxford
Publications - 857
Citations - 69113
Peter Simmonds is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatitis C virus & Virus. The author has an hindex of 131, co-authored 823 publications receiving 62953 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter Simmonds include John Radcliffe Hospital & Edinburgh Royal Infirmary.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Guidelines for public database submission of uncultivated virus genome sequences for taxonomic classification
Evelien M. Adriaenssens,Simon Roux,J. Rodney Brister,Ilene Karsch-Mizrachi,Jens H. Kuhn,Arvind Varsani,Alejandro Reyes,Cédric Lood,Elliot J. Lefkowitz,Matthew B. Sullivan,Rob A. Edwards,Peter Simmonds,Luisa Rubino,Sead Sabanadzovic,Mart Krupovic,Bas E. Dutilh +15 more
Book ChapterDOI
Source Location and Dataset Incompleteness in Acoustic Emissions from Ice Tank Tests on Ice-Rubble-Ice Friction
TL;DR: In this paper , acoustic emissions were measured during ice-rubble-ice friction tests conducted at the HSVA ice tank and the results from source location showed that the round rubble geometry gave higher acoustic activity at the sliding interfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI
Western European emission estimates of CFC-11, CFC-12 and CCl4 derived from atmospheric measurements from 2008 to 2021
Alison Redington,Alistair J. Manning,Stephan Henne,Francesco Graziosi,Luke M. Western,Jgor Arduini,Anita L. Ganesan,Christina M. Harth,Michela Maione,J. Mühle,Simon O'Doherty,Joseph C. Pitt,Stefan Reimann,Matthew Rigby,Peter K. Salameh,Peter Simmonds,T. G. Spain,Kieran Stanley,Martin K. Vollmer,Ray F. Weiss,Dickon Young +20 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors assess the emissions of CFC-11, CFC12 and CCl4 from western Europe and conclude that emissions of these gases have all declined from 2008 to 2021 in western Europe, and that no evidence is found that western European emissions contributed to the unexplained part of the global increase in atmospheric concentrations of CO 2 observed in the last decade.
Journal ArticleDOI
How to recognise and deal with dubious virus sequences
Posted ContentDOI
Evolutionary origins of epidemic potential among human RNA viruses
Lu Lu,Liam Brierley,Gail Robertson,Feifei Zhang,Samantha Lycett,D B Smith,Margo Chase-Topping,Peter Simmonds,Mark E. J. Woolhouse +8 more
TL;DR: The evolution of human transmissibility is investigated through parallel analyses of 1755 virus genome sequences from 39 RNA virus genera and it is estimated that at least 74% of these lineages have evolved directly from non-human viruses in other mammals or birds.